Jose Mourinho Should Have Kicked David Moyes And Manchester United While They Were Down

A few years ago, I was working for a nationally ranked college basketball program (small college-NCAA Division II) and we were playing in the conference tournament against one of our biggest rivals. Earlier in the season, we had twice beaten this team by margins of 20+ points. The rumor before the conference tournament was that another poor result would lead to the rival head coach being fired.

Fast forward to two minutes remaining in the game and we are up by almost 30 points. Normally (according to the unwritten rules of the sport) the winning coach would start to empty his bench to give some of his kids playing time (the ones who don’t normally play), but also to ‘save face’ for the opposition.

I turned to my head coach and asked if I should tell our guys to get ready to go into the game. I will never forget his image or the words he said. He sat down, leaned back in his seat, let the most sinister smile creep across his face and said “f**k him”.

We didn’t take our foot off the gas for the last two minutes of the game, ended up winning by 30+ points and the rival head coach was fired a few weeks later.

Perhaps Jose Mourinho should have taken a page from my former coach’s book by kicking David Moyes and Manchester United while they were down.

This is not because I believe that the Juan Mata transfer will eventually come back to hurt the Portuguese manager and Chelsea in the end. The London club is getting a record fee from Manchester United and Mourinho obviously has no use for Mata in his squad.

About The Author

Although a college basketball coach for sixteen years on the NCAA Division I and II levels, Peter has been an avid football fan for more than half his life. He considers himself a student of coaching and team management.
As well as coaching, Peter has spent time working in Sports Information at various colleges and universities. His articles on European football have been picked up by Bleacher Report UK, International Business Times UK and USA Today.
Twitter: @CoachPeteQuinn

16 Comments

FlyvanescenceJanuary 23, 2014

Or, this could be a tactic by Mourinho to save David Moyes job for another year or two, so that United dont sack him and go hire a competent manager . . .

Actually, it’s the more obvious. Mou doesn’t like Mata, like DM doesn’t like Kagawa (who will be sold in the Summer) and 37 pounds for Mata is way over-priced but it shows how desperate United are. There’s a lot of great MF’s but they are all competing now, very hard to buy in Jan. I suggest to DM to keep looking for defensive MF’s as both Fletcher and Carrick can input creative play but not when they’re tied to the back defending in front of the back four.

Considering Chelsea paid 23m for Mata and he was their best player two seasons in a row 37m seems like a good price. At 25 Utd could still make money by selling him on when his contract is up or they could have a top player for the next 10 years. Add in the fee utd will get for Kagawa if he’s sold and your net cost for Mata drops to around 25m. I don’t care what team you support nobody can say he’s not worth 25m.

This was a business move by Chelsea, that’s all. Jose didn’t prefer Mata, Chelsea do not see Man Utd as a challenger for the title and most importantly, Chelsea sold him for 37 million quid. I doubt there were subliminal motives when the preceding reasons are ample enough.

Chelsea would never have sold Mata to any club they regarded as a direct rival. Right now Mourinho does not see United as a rival that will derail Chelsea’s title challenge but can actually help if United are able to take points off Arsenal and City both clubs they still have to play.

United don’t play Chelsea again in the league. And if they meet in the Champions League Mata would be ineligible having played for Chelsea already.

Mournho knows what he’s doing. It’s a strategy that helps Chelsea immensely. They also get money to spend on transfers. Salah was bought with the profit.

How do you knwo this is not kicking them while they are down? He just made 37m pounds on a player he didn’t want and Moyes will also have problem putting that same player in his starting 11 as his best position is behind the striker(same position ROoney plays in) LOL.
Jose will use part of that money to bid for Rooney or another striker come summer.

But Moyes doesnt seem to know how to play without actual wide players. Hence he still uses Valencia and Young when he now could have an attacking trio behind the striker of Kagawa, Rooney and Mata. If RVP is fit thats a menacing front 4. But no, he needs Young and Valencia to play like second fullbacks.